The
British government has learned
that Saddam Hussein recently
sought significant quantities
of uranium from
Africa.
-- President Bush's
justification for killing four
thousand Iraqi civilians: a
fake document | [Images added
by this website] London, Wednesday, July 16,
2003 Cheney
under pressure to quit over false war
evidence Anger
grows on both sides of Atlantic at
misleading claims on eve of Iraq conflict
By Andrew
Buncombe in Washington and Marie
Woolf DICK Cheney, the US
Vice-President and the administration's
most outspoken hawk over Iraq, faced
demands for his resignation last night as
he was accused of using false evidence to
build the case for war. He was accused of using his office to
insist that a false claim about Iraq's
efforts to buy uranium from Africa to
restart its nuclear programme be included
in George Bush's State of the Union
address - overriding the concerns of the
CIA director, George Tenet. Mr
Cheney was also accused of knowingly
misleading Congress when the
administration sought its authorisation
for the use of force to oust Saddam
Hussein. The allegations against Mr Cheney have
come most vocally from a group of senior
former intelligence officials who believe
that information from the intelligence
community was selectively used to support
a war fought for political reasons. In an
open letter to President George Bush, the
group have asked that he demand Mr
Cheney's resignation. As the clamour for a full inquest into
the African uranium claims grew on both
sides of the Atlantic, Jack Straw,
the Foreign Secretary, was accused by MPs
of lacking "credibility" after he admitted
knowing a month before the war that
documents making the assertion were
forgeries. Mr Straw said in a statement he
had known that letters given to the UN
nuclear agency, the International Atomic
Energy Agency, about the Niger claim were
fake as early as February. Mr Straw also claimed that the
Government's case for military action was
not based on "intelligence reports". Labour
MPs, including Tam Dalyell, the father of
the House, asked why Mr Straw had not told
MPs that the documents were fake in
advance of the vote to approve military
action on 18 March. "He now says the
Government knew it was a forgery in
February. Why didn't he tell us before
Parliament voted for war?" he said. "Also
if the case for war is not based on
intelligence, what is it based on?" Last night the Labour-dominated Foreign
Affairs Committee asked Mr Straw to reveal
what he knew about the Niger claim. Donald Anderson, the committee's
chairman, wrote to Mr Straw asking him
when the CIA first questioned the Niger
connection, and why ministers had not
admitted earlier that there were doubts
about the claims. The committee also asked
whether the CIA had questioned any other
claims in the September dossier on Iraq's
weapons. The letter, signed by 11 MPs of all
parties, called on Mr Straw to confirm
The Independent's report that
technical documents and centrifuge parts
found at the home of an Iraqi nuclear
scientist in Baghdad had lain buried for
12 years. The letter also asked Mr Straw
to reveal when he knew that the former US
ambassador Joseph Wilson had found
claims about Niger-Iraq links to be
false. Last week the White House admitted that
the claim that Iraq was seeking
"significant quantities of uranium from
Africa" - based on faked documents
provided by the Italian intelligence
services - should not have been included
in President Bush's speech of 28
January. In Washington there is no conclusive
proof that Mr Cheney was responsible for
insisting that the claim be made in the
speech. But there is clear evidence of Mr
Cheney's interest in the alleged Niger
deal. Joseph Wilson, a former US
ambassador, said he was asked by the CIA
to go to Niger and investigate the claim
in a request from the Vice-President's
office. Mr Cheney's chief of staff,
Lewis Libby, has admitted that
during a briefing from the CIA "the
Vice-President asked a question about the
implication of the report". There have been reports from CIA
officials that in the months before the
war Mr Cheney made a "multiple number" of
personal visits to its headquarters in
Virginia to meet officials analysing
intelligence relating to Iraq.
"[He] sent signals, intended or
otherwise, that a certain output was
desired from here," one senior CIA
official told reporters. The CIA director, Mr Tenet, said he
accepted responsibility for approving the
speech but said his officers had only
"concurred" with White House officials
that by naming the British Government as
the source of the Niger claim it was
"factually correct". Britain has stood by
the claim, saying it has evidence in
addition to the Italian
documents. -
The Dubious
Suicide of George Tenet
-
Pat
Buchanan: Naked Forgery
-
Patrick
Buchanan: Whose War?, in The
American Conservative. March 24,
2003
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